Martin Gunnarson | Södertörn University (original) (raw)

Uploads

Papers by Martin Gunnarson

Research paper thumbnail of Trafficking in human beings for the purpose of organ removal: A comprehensive literature review

Transplant Immunology, 2014

Research paper thumbnail of The Complexities of Victimhood: Insights from the Organ Trade

The aim of this paper is to explore the complexity of the concept of the victim within the contex... more The aim of this paper is to explore the complexity of the concept of the victim within the context of organ trading. By examining the intricate phenomenon of organ trade, we show how prevailing notions of victimhood form the basis of concrete social practices. The empirical basis for this exploration comprises in-depth interviews conducted during fieldwork in South Africa and Kosovo. We also draw on research undertaken at various expert meetings.

Reports by Martin Gunnarson

Research paper thumbnail of TRAFFICKING IN HUMAN BEINGS FOR THE PURPOSE OF ORGAN REMOVAL A Case Study Report

Books by Martin Gunnarson

Research paper thumbnail of The Body as Gift, Resource and Commodity: Exchanging Organs, Tissues and Cells in the 21st Century

This book is the outcome of a research project at the Centre for Studies in Practical Knowledge,... more This book is the outcome of a research project at the Centre
for Studies in Practical Knowledge, Södertörn University,
funded by the Baltic Sea Foundation. The main participants
of the project were one philosopher—Fredrik Svenaeus—
one historian—Ulla Ekström von Essen—and three ethnologists—
Martin Gunnarson, Susanne Lundin and Markus
Idvall—from Södertörn University and Lund University,
but we also benefitted from the help and advice of medical
researchers and physicians from the Karolinska Institutet
—Annika Tibell and C. G. Groth—and many other scholars
from Sweden and abroad, especially from the Baltic Sea Region.
You will find some of our collaborators represented
as authors in this volume, but most of them are not on the
list of participants, since they, for ethical reasons, have to
remain anonymous. The persons in question have helped
us with information about and access to practices which are
precarious objects of study—organ transplantation and organ
trade—subjects that are highly sensitive and often hard
to speak about for the people involved. We want to thank
the health care personnel, patients and other persons, who
have generously offered us their time without any other
return than to be able to support the growth of knowledge
and reflection in this field. We hope that this book and other
outcomes of our research project, such as articles in journals
and newspapers, and presentations at conferences and
meetings with the public, will help to build sound political
judgement and policies on organ, tissue and cell donation.
The rules and procedures of organ, tissue and cell transfer
are, indeed, vital, not only in the sense that they concern
who will live and who will die, but also in the sense that
the decisions in question determine how we are to view the
moral essence of human relationships as such. What duties
do we owe to each other regarding the giving away of what is
most intimately ours: our bodies and the organs, tissues and
cells they consist of? And what limits should we set regarding
procuring and transferring the “things” in question?

Research paper thumbnail of Trafficking in human beings for the purpose of organ removal: A comprehensive literature review

Transplant Immunology, 2014

Research paper thumbnail of The Complexities of Victimhood: Insights from the Organ Trade

The aim of this paper is to explore the complexity of the concept of the victim within the contex... more The aim of this paper is to explore the complexity of the concept of the victim within the context of organ trading. By examining the intricate phenomenon of organ trade, we show how prevailing notions of victimhood form the basis of concrete social practices. The empirical basis for this exploration comprises in-depth interviews conducted during fieldwork in South Africa and Kosovo. We also draw on research undertaken at various expert meetings.

Research paper thumbnail of TRAFFICKING IN HUMAN BEINGS FOR THE PURPOSE OF ORGAN REMOVAL A Case Study Report

Research paper thumbnail of The Body as Gift, Resource and Commodity: Exchanging Organs, Tissues and Cells in the 21st Century

This book is the outcome of a research project at the Centre for Studies in Practical Knowledge,... more This book is the outcome of a research project at the Centre
for Studies in Practical Knowledge, Södertörn University,
funded by the Baltic Sea Foundation. The main participants
of the project were one philosopher—Fredrik Svenaeus—
one historian—Ulla Ekström von Essen—and three ethnologists—
Martin Gunnarson, Susanne Lundin and Markus
Idvall—from Södertörn University and Lund University,
but we also benefitted from the help and advice of medical
researchers and physicians from the Karolinska Institutet
—Annika Tibell and C. G. Groth—and many other scholars
from Sweden and abroad, especially from the Baltic Sea Region.
You will find some of our collaborators represented
as authors in this volume, but most of them are not on the
list of participants, since they, for ethical reasons, have to
remain anonymous. The persons in question have helped
us with information about and access to practices which are
precarious objects of study—organ transplantation and organ
trade—subjects that are highly sensitive and often hard
to speak about for the people involved. We want to thank
the health care personnel, patients and other persons, who
have generously offered us their time without any other
return than to be able to support the growth of knowledge
and reflection in this field. We hope that this book and other
outcomes of our research project, such as articles in journals
and newspapers, and presentations at conferences and
meetings with the public, will help to build sound political
judgement and policies on organ, tissue and cell donation.
The rules and procedures of organ, tissue and cell transfer
are, indeed, vital, not only in the sense that they concern
who will live and who will die, but also in the sense that
the decisions in question determine how we are to view the
moral essence of human relationships as such. What duties
do we owe to each other regarding the giving away of what is
most intimately ours: our bodies and the organs, tissues and
cells they consist of? And what limits should we set regarding
procuring and transferring the “things” in question?